You are on page 1of 4

HALLOTT SZVEG RTSE

A HANGANYAG SZVEGTIRATA (TAPESCRIPT)

Task 1: TAPESCRIPT

Interviewer: Now, Chad, a more personal question: I know youre a poet. Youve been here
for a couple of months now, four months in fact.
Chad: Yes.
Interviewer: Have you written any poems since you came to Hungary?
Chad: Well, I started a series of, theyre called tram poems or something, I when I first,
well I guess Ive switched to the metro but when I first came I was taking the Id take the
tram to Wesselnyi and then get on the 74 bus trolley bus, so then I would just write
mmm about a stanza or two every time, and then I arranged all those stanzas into like a
rather long poem. So I do have that. And those are just based on images that I saw out the
window or people or things like that. But, honestly, when Im in another country, I usually
write about being like in America, when Im in America then I write about being somewhere
else. For some reason when youre when youre in that space, its hard to think I dont
know, maybe objectively about it, you know its its hard to detach yourself
Interviewer: You need the perspective
Chad: Yeah, right, right right, I need the perspective and its easier to get a perspectve when
youre outside of the situation looking back at it. So so now Im writing this non-fiction
work about umm being a child in the 70s in America and growing up with a sort of a
a hippy mother who moved around all the time, so its just about all these different houses
we lived in, actually 30 different houses we lived in by the time I was 15. So every chapter is
a different house. So thats what Im working on in Hungary, writing about America in 1970.
Interviewer: Any chance of publishing these things?
Chad: I think so. You know Ive had some poems published since Ive been here, cause Im
always sending out the poems, so but this fiction piece, non-fiction piece, well, creative nonfiction they call it because I make some things up but still its based on things that really
happened. Ive just sent it out to a couple of places like some of the chapters, last week. But
Ill find out in the next couple of months if Im successful with that.
Source: Interview with Chad Faries (Kirly Zsolt, 2002)

HALLOTT SZVEG RTSE


A HANGANYAG SZVEGTIRATA (TAPESCRIPT)

Task 2: TAPESCRIPT

Announcer: One of Britains longest traditions and greatest tourist attractions appears to be
under threat. The famous blue and red-cloaked Beefeater guards have been told they have to
retire early at 60 instead of 65. Its the job of the Beefeaters to stand guard at the Tower of
London, scene of many dramatic moments in British history and the home of the Royal
Crown Jewels. The government says early retirement will save money. John Murphy has this
report.
John Murphy: They were formed by Henry VII in 1485 as guards for state prisoners and
today they act as police and guides for the Tower of London, the scene of many dramatic
moments in Britains history, including the execution of traitors. But after five hundred years
of service, the older Beefeaters at least are being dispensed with. And theyre not happy. On
top of their concerns about their pensions, the Beefeaters, who used to have the luxury of a
job for life, will lose some very enviable perks: not just the smart red and gold outfits, but
more particularly comfortable accommodation within the Tower itself. The government
denies that its undermining British heritage, but as the bugle sounds the last post during the
centuries-old Ceremony of the Keys, when the Tower of London is locked up for the night,
the Beefeaters ponder an uncertain future.
Source: BBC, Radio 4 (1998)

HALLOTT SZVEG RTSE


A HANGANYAG SZVEGTIRATA (TAPESCRIPT)

Task 3: TAPESCRIPT

Announcer: The journey which to one traveller may seem commonplace can challenge
another.
Woman: One of my most memorable trips was walking parts of the Pembrokeshire coastal
footpath with with a friend. That was great because you got lots of different experiences,
you got I got sea, I got rough walking country, lots of sea animals and birds around,
wonderful long flat beaches with with very very good sand and you can just walk for
miles and miles and miles and not come across very many people. The sea: clean, fresh,
wonderful sounding, particularly from right at the top of a cliff, and it was beautiful autumn
weather, so we had sunshine, too. And it was just incredible.
Man: We got to Paris and it was quite late at night and we found a hotel in sort of a seedy part
of town in the 18th district, which was fairly dominated by Arab shops and crummy dwellings
and we found a terrible hotel which was very smelly and we went into this place and the
sheets were slightly damp and the blankets were slightly damp and it didnt augur well really
for the start of a holiday. And just arriving in the room, there were no lights on the landing
and we were laden down with rucksacks and my friend actually fell head first down a flight of
stairs in the in the darkness. Ah That made a right clatter and I thought that was the
end of our holiday actually, cause (on the) first day a massive disaster I picked my way
down this staircase wondering what I was going to find at the bottom. He was sort of semiconscious, but obviously not completely out of it. Couple of doors opened just along the
corridor. Obviously people were looking out to see whatd happened and then went back in
pretty rapidly, seeing two Englishmen crouched at the bottom of that flight of stairs, one
obviously in no fit state.
Source: BBC, Radio 4 (1998)

HALLOTT SZVEG RTSE


A HANGANYAG SZVEGTIRATA (TAPESCRIPT)

Task 4: TAPESCRIPT

This is Radio 4, its just after half past eight. In 1992 the British inventor, Trevor Bayliss saw
a documentary about Africas AIDS crisis. One particular fact caught his attention: although
there were regular radio broadcasts of health care information, many people never heard them.
The reason: batteries; they were scarce and expensive. No batteries, no radio; no radio, no
information. So Bayliss set to work on an answer so obvious and apparently simple you
wander why no one had done it before. He invented a clockwork radio that needed neither
batteries nor mains power to work. And work it does, wonderfully. On BBC 1 this evening
QED will be retracing the remarkable story of Bayliss clockwork radio, described by Nelson
Mandela as a fantastic achievement. Thats QED, BBC 1, ten oclock, tonight.

Source: BBC, Radio 4, (1997)

QED = quod erat demonstrandum (Latin) which was to be proved used for saying that a particular fact proves
that what you have said is true; also the name of a popular scientific educational programme on BBC.

You might also like